Answer:
Answers will vary but should include the following concepts:
Schools were racially segregated until the Brown ruling due to the “separate but equal clause” upheld by the Plessy ruling.
During the 1950s, civil rights groups began to challenge this notion.
NAACP lawyers began class action lawsuits in favor of black schoolchildren.
A class action suit in Topeka, Kansas, was brought by school board representative Oliver Brown, a parent of a child denied access to Topeka’s white school.
Brown claimed the segregation violated the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment because the separate schools were in fact not equal.
The Supreme Court heard the case, with Thurgood Marshall serving as chief counsel for the plaintiffs.
Chief Justice Earl Warren ruled that segregation in public schools did in fact violate the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
The Court’s ruling stated that racial segregation in schools is “inherently unequal” and thus unconstitutional.
The ruling in Brown v. Board of Education overturned the ruling in Plessy v. Ferguson.
Step-by-step explanation: